The Battle of the Bulge - National Archives

 The Battle of the Bulge Loomed Large 70 Winters Ago

Men of the 83rd Division move toward the front in the Houffalize sector, Belgium, January 15, 1945.

The Germans called it the "Operation Watch on the

Rhine." The French named it the

"Battle of the Ardennes." And

the Western Allies termed it the

"Ardennes Counteroffensive."

But because of the way the map of

Western Europe looked at the height

of the battle, it became known to his-

tory as the "Battle of the Bulge."

It was the winter of 1944?1945,

Above: German infantrymen run across a Belgian road strewn with Allied armor and artillery. Left: The German advance along American lines in Belgium's Ardenne Forest in December 1944 created a dangerous "bulge," as shown in this Army map.

months before the war in Europe would end.

Despite the protestations of

his generals, Adolf Hitler decided on one

final attempt to turn World War II in favor

of his German Third Reich. For this, he

ordered resources diverted from other bat-

tle fronts--including his losing campaign

against the Russians in the east.

The Allies were caught off guard, as Hitler

had hoped. Thousands of U.S. troops were

surrounded at one point. In the end, the Allies

committed enough troops that the tired, ill-

equipped German army was overwhelmed.

Indeed, the Battle of the Bulge was an

important turning point in the war in the

Allies' favor, but it was not without its cost.

The Battle of the Bulge is considered one of

the bloodiest battles of World War II.

J J J

From D-day on, the Allies had swept quickly across Europe--sometimes getting too far ahead of their supply line and grinding to a halt. Nonetheless, they pushed hard toward the German homeland, liberating Paris and much of France along the way.

Prologue 39

Above: U.S. troops march behind tanks somewhere in the Ardennes. Below: An American soldier holds his rifle on German prisoners taken in the "Bulge."

By December 1944, the Allies had pushed inland from the French coast to the German lines. They were ready to cross into German territory and move toward Berlin to deliver the final blow to Hitler's Third Reich.

Although the Canadians and the British anchored the front in the north and the Americans in the south, in between was only a thin, weak line of troops. U.S. commanders counted on the Ardennes Forest to help them block any German offensive.

But the thin line and the forest were no match for German troops and tanks. Hitler had brought in troops and weaponry from other locations in an attempt to burst through the thin Allied lines and create a path to Antwerp, Belgium, an important harbor for his Third Reich. Along the way,

40 Prologue

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